Faculty of Nursing, 3rd Floor, Clinical Sciences Building, University of Alberta, Alberta, AB T6G 2G3, Canada.
BMC Health Serv Res. 2010 Jun 16;10:168. doi: 10.1186/1472-6963-10-168.
Research utilization investigators have called for more focused examination of the influence of context on research utilization behaviors. Yet, up until recently, lack of instrumentation to identify and quantify aspects of organizational context that are integral to research use has significantly hampered these efforts. The Alberta Context Tool (ACT) was developed to assess the relationships between organizational factors and research utilization by a variety of healthcare professional groups. The purpose of this paper is to present findings from a pilot study using the ACT to elicit pediatric and neonatal healthcare professionals' perceptions of the organizational context in which they work and their use of research to inform practice. Specifically, we report on the relationship between dimensions of context, founded on the Promoting Action on Research Implementation in Health Services (PARIHS) framework, and self-reported research use behavior.
A cross-sectional survey approach was employed using a version of the ACT, modified specifically for pediatric settings. The survey was administered to nurses working in three pediatric units in Alberta, Canada. Scores for three dimensions of context (culture, leadership and evaluation) were used to categorize respondent data into one of four context groups (high, moderately high, moderately low and low). We then examined the relationships between nurses' self-reported research use and their perceived context.
A 69% response rate was achieved. Statistically significant differences in nurses' perceptions of culture, leadership and evaluation, and self-reported conceptual research use were found across the three units. Differences in instrumental research use across the three groups of nurses by unit were not significant. Higher self-reported instrumental and conceptual research use by all nurses in the sample was associated with more positive perceptions of their context.
Overall, the results of this study lend support to the view that more positive contexts are associated with higher reports of research use in practice. These findings have implications for organizational endeavors to promote evidence-informed practice and maximize the quality of care. Importantly, these findings can be used to guide the development of interventions to target modifiable characteristics of organizational context that are influential in shaping research use behavior.
研究利用调查人员呼吁更集中地研究背景对研究利用行为的影响。然而,直到最近,缺乏识别和量化与研究利用密切相关的组织背景方面的手段,严重阻碍了这些努力。阿尔伯塔省背景工具(ACT)是为了评估各种医疗保健专业群体的组织因素与研究利用之间的关系而开发的。本文的目的是介绍使用 ACT 进行的一项试点研究的结果,该研究旨在了解儿科和新生儿保健专业人员对其工作环境的组织背景的看法,以及他们如何利用研究来指导实践。具体来说,我们报告了基于促进卫生服务研究实施行动(PARIHS)框架的背景维度与自我报告的研究使用行为之间的关系。
采用横断面调查方法,使用专门为儿科环境修改的 ACT 版本。该调查在加拿大阿尔伯塔省的三个儿科病房对护士进行了调查。使用三个背景维度(文化、领导和评估)的得分将受访者数据分为四个背景组之一(高、中高、中低和低)。然后,我们检查了护士自我报告的研究使用与他们感知的背景之间的关系。
我们实现了 69%的回应率。在三个单位中,护士对文化、领导和评估的看法以及自我报告的概念研究使用存在显著差异。三个护士组之间在仪器研究使用方面的差异不显著。所有样本中护士自我报告的仪器和概念研究使用更高,与对其背景的更积极看法相关。
总的来说,这项研究的结果支持这样一种观点,即更积极的背景与更高的实践中报告的研究使用相关。这些发现对组织努力促进循证实践和最大限度地提高护理质量具有意义。重要的是,这些发现可以用于指导干预措施的开发,以针对对塑造研究使用行为有影响的组织背景的可改变特征。